Wright v. Rabey

86 S.E. 71, 117 Va. 884, 1915 Va. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 9, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 86 S.E. 71 (Wright v. Rabey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Rabey, 86 S.E. 71, 117 Va. 884, 1915 Va. LEXIS 109 (Va. 1915).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This proceeding is under the act of the General Assembly approved March 4, 1912—Acts 1912, p. 183—which provides that any person having an interest in real estate, upon petition filed in the court which would have jurisdiction in an action of ejectment concerning such real estate, shall have the right to have ascertained and designated by the said court the true boundary line or lines to such real estate as to one or more of the coterminous land owners. All persons interested in the coterminous real [888]*888estate are required to be made parties to the said petition, which shall be matured for hearing as provided for maturing an action of ejectment, except that it shall not be necessary to serve a copy of the petition. The statute further provides that the trial of the cause shall be conducted as other trials at law and the same rules of evidence shall apply and the same defenses may be made as in other actions at law. The court may, upon application of either party to the petition, by order in term time or in vacation, direct such survey or surveys to be made as may be deemed necessary.

Defendant in error, Maggie G. Rabey, pursuant to said statute, filed her petition in this cause, making plaintiffs in error, Frank Wright and wife, and Martha Hargrove, the widow, and Mary Frances Hargrove, infant child and sole heir of Legare Hargrove, deceased, defendants thereto, in which the petitioner sets out her ownership of a certain lot of land, containing 3 3-20 acres, more or less, its location and the sources of her title thereto; the boundaries of her said land, the ownership of the lands of the defendants adjoining hers, and then sets forth that the part of the southern boundary line of her land which divides it and the land of the said defendant, Frank Wright, and the whole of the western boundary which divides her land and the land of said defendant, Mary Frances Hargrove, remains undefined and is undetermined and indefinite, and praying that said disputed, undetermined and unascertained lines might be ascertained and designated by the court as between petitioner and her mentioned coterminous land owners, according to the provisions of said statute.

The defendants, Frank Wright and wife, appeared and filed a lengthy answer in writing to said petition, which upon the motion of the petitioner the court struck out and ordered a designated surveyor to go upon the lands of the litigants in the cause and make a physical survey of the [889]*889boundary line between them as shown by the records contained in the clerk’s office of the Circuit Court of Nahsemond county, and after prescribed notice to the adjoining land owners, to make a plat showing the same in their true position as regards the adjacent or adjoining lands, and to return such plat to the clerk of the court on or before a designated date, all of which was done. Whereupon, the defendants, Frank Wright and wife, tendered their pleas Nos. 1, 2 and 3, and upon issue joined on said pleas Nos. 1 and 2, No. 3 having been rejected by the court on the motion of the plaintiff, the cause was tried before a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of ‘the plaintiff and designating the true boundary line between the parties to be as specifically set forth in the verdict, which verdict the court refused to set aside, and entered judgment thereon to the effect that the boundary line between the lands of the parties to this cause should henceforth be as ascertained and fixed by the verdict of the jury, and be binding upon the parties to this proceeding and their heirs, devisees and assigns, to which judgment Frank Wright and wife obtained this writ of error.

The first assignment of error is to the ruling of the court striking out the answer filed by plaintiffs in error to the petition of defendant in error. It is contended that because the defendant in error had incorporated two issues in her petition, the claimed location of her southern line and the claimed location of her western line, a plea which by the rules of pleading directed the court’s attention to a single point is not suited to a defense to the petition, but the defense should be set up by way of answer as though the proceeding was in equity.

This contention is not only without merit but is wholly inconsistent with a further contention made by plaintiffs in error, viz., that this in fact is merely an action of ejectment to try title to and recover from plaintiff in error, [890]*890Frank Wright, possession of a small tract of land containing (exclusive of a certain railroad right of way) about 1 acres. The record plainly shows that the proceeding is purely and solely one pursuant to the statute, supra, which provides in express terms, (1) that the remedy shall be “upon petition filed,” etc.; (2) that the petition .“shall be matured for hearing as provided for maturing an action of ejectment, except that it shall not be necessary to serve a copy of the petition,” and (3) that “the trial shall be conducted as in other actions at law.”

It is to be observed that the second provision of the statute expressly prescribes the procedure of a defendant after the filing of the petition, in that it expressly adopts, in substance, at this stage of the proceeding the pleading prescribed in an action of ejectment for the .defendant. The title of the act is “to authorize the ascertainment and designation of the boundary lines of real estate,” and it was clearly within the contemplation of the legislature that just such conditions as those presented in the petition of defendant in error presented in this cause might exist, and to provide a summary method and a proceeding by which such disputes might be settled and determined without having a great deal of technical formality about it and the true boundary line or lines between coterminous land owners or claimants designated, the determination of the dispute to be by trial before a jury, or the judge of the court where trial by jury is waived by the parties to the controversy, and upon issue or issues joined between them as in other actions at law.

It may be conceded that plaintiffs in error, defendants below, had the right to file the answer they tendered in this cause, yet the refusal of the court to permit the answer to be filed was not at all prejudicial, since the matters set up therein, which were not mere conclusions of law relied on by way of defense, could have been and were, as far [891]*891as proper to be permitted, set up under the issues made by the pleas they were allowed to file in the cause and upon which issue was joined and the trial had.

The second assignment of error calls in question the ruling of the court rejecting plaintiffs in error’s plea No. 3. Pleas numbered 1 and 2 which were permitted to be filed and upon which issue was joined set up, in substance, every thing and matter contained in plea No. 3, differing only in language, and therefore the court did not err in rejecting this additional plea, and no possible harm could have resulted to plaintiffs in error or advantage to defendant in error by its rejection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 S.E. 71, 117 Va. 884, 1915 Va. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-rabey-va-1915.